Header: Header: Header:

THEY LEFT BEHIND LASTING IMPRESSIONS

Article by Rich Donnell, Editor-in-Chief, Timber Processing November 2020

Our fine team at Hatton-Brown Publishers is responsible for producing six trade magazines, one of which is Timber Processing. Those six magazines translate into 46 issues per year, so you can see we’re basically on a magazine-per-week schedule. My point is not to boast about the amount of work we do, but rather that in the never-ending haste to put another magazine out the door (as we say in the business), we sometimes lose sight of the forest for the trees.

The accumulation of editorial material to fill a magazine is always a lively challenge, and “always” comes down to the wire, and only when glancing one last time through this issue of Timber Processing before we uploaded it to the printer did it dawn on me that this issue includes three obituaries on men whose contributions to the wood products industry were important and numerous. Obviously I knew the obituaries were in the magazine because I put them in there and edited and wrote some of the copy, but their collective significance didn’t strike me until I stepped back and took a longer look.

John Porter Price, 80; Harold (Red Thomas), 94; and Fred (Brud) Horstkotte, Jr., 97, were big-time innovators and contributors.

Price, from Arkansas, started out as a logger and a lumberman, and then invented the rotary drum debarker to enhance his sawlog and chips production. It turned out so well, and drew so much interest, that he formed a company for the purpose of fabricating and supplying drum debarkers and chip mill technologies. Then he had the foresight to see that paper companies would prefer to contract out their chips production, so he formed another company that ran independent chip mills for that purpose, and became probably the largest producer of chips in the world.

I’m sure you’ve heard of RedBuilt, the company that produces and distributes various engineered wood products. The “Red” in RedBuilt is for Red Thomas. Thomas, from Idaho, started out selling lumber and then came upon an open web truss product created by architect Art Troutner. Thomas convinced Troutner this was something special and they teamed up to form Trus Joist with Thomas as the promoter of what became a string of products such as I-joists and laminated veneer lumber. Ultimately down the winding road, RedBuilt was formed when some of the Trus Joist crowd, including Thomas, bought back from Weyerhaeuser the Trus Joist business Weyerhaeuser had purchased from them.

Fred Horstkotte, Jr., from Oregon, known to many as Brud, put his design and engineering signature on many a Western sawmill, as did his father and namesake before him. They also had several patents on various sawmill technologies. In fact the Oregon Historical Society Research Library contains thousands of architectural drawings, photograph albums, and records relating to their designs and construction of lumber mills from 1915-2000.

Interestingly, all three of these men were quite skilled at their respective hobbies: Price, duck hunting; Thomas, piloting airplanes; and Horstkotte, snow skiing.

“The highest tribute to the dead is not grief but gratitude.” —Thornton Wilder

Latest News

PTF BPI Announces 2023 Dates

The 7th biennial international Processing Technologies for the Forest and Bio-based Products Industries (PTF BPI) 2023 Conference will be held October 30 to Nov. 1, 2023 in St. Simons Island, Ga. at the King & Prince Resort…

GP Donates $100,000 To Volunteer Fire Department In Corrigan, Texas

The Corrigan Volunteer Fire Department, which has close to 25 active volunteers and answered more than 150 emergency calls in 2022, has kicked off a capital campaign to build a new fire station, which will cost $400,000. In support of this campaign, and in recognition of the three major facilities Georgia-Pacific operates (and the 1,000 people employed) in Polk County, Texas, the company has donated $100,000 to the effort…

Nashville Sets Perfect Stage For Lumber Conference

Lumber producers who made the trek to Room 205 and the 2023 Productivity & Efficiency Conference produced by Timber Processing and sponsored by Southern Forest Products Assn. (SFPA) were not disappointed as the event featured a wide range of speakers who delivered insights on different facets of mill operations…

Sawmillers Show Up At EXPO

After six shows in Atlanta, Ga. dating back to 2011, the Southern Forest Products Assn., host of the biennial Forest Products Machinery & Equipment EXPO, decided to move the 37th edition to Nashville, Tenn. Held August 23-25, this was an exciting change for exhibitors and attendees alike—the Music City Center was in the heart of the city, allowing everyone the chance to not only walk from the variety of hotels and top-notch restaurants to the show floor but also enjoy all that Nashville has to offer by way of its world-famous music scene…

Find Us On Social

Newsletter

The monthly Timber Processing Industry Newsletter reaches over 4,000 mill owners and supervisors.

 

Subscribe/Renew

Timber Processing is delivered 10 times per year to subscribers who represent sawmill ownership, management and supervisory personnel and corporate executives. Subscriptions are FREE to qualified individuals.

Advertise

Complete the online form so we can direct you to the appropriate Sales Representative.